- Title: Hungary welcomes wealthy Chinese despite migrant hostility
- Date: 5th October 2016
- Summary: BUDAPEST, HUNGARY (RECENT) (REUTERS) CHINESE BUSINESSMAN YAN DING WAITING WITH HIS DAUGHTER AT BUS STOP BUS ARRIVING DING AND HIS DAUGHTER, XUE ER, GETTING ON BUS VARIOUS OF DING AND XUE ER TRAVELLING ON BUS BUS DRIVING THROUGH STREET DING AND XUE ER WALKING TO SCHOOL DING AND XUE ER ENTERING SCHOOL DING WALKING INTO HIS OFFICE BUILDING SIGN SHOWING DING'S COMPANY (SOUNDBITE) (Mandarin) CHINESE CITIZEN RESIDENT IN BUDAPEST, YAN DING, SAYING (According to third party translation): "In China pollution is bad, and the cities grow so fast you cannot get the kind of education you would like for your child. The goal is for my child to be in a better environment, a good education like here in Hungary."
- Embargoed: 20th October 2016 12:57
- Keywords: Hungary China migrants Viktor Orban migrant crisis influx
- Location: BUDAPEST, HUNGARY
- City: BUDAPEST, HUNGARY
- Country: Hungary
- Topics: Asylum/Immigration/Refugees,Government/Politics
- Reuters ID: LVA00152QAJP5
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban is known for his outspoken hostility to migrants and has built a razor-wire border fence to keep them out, but he has also quietly opened Hungary's doors to foreigners rich enough to pay to live in the country.
A "residency bond" scheme, launched in 2013, has attracted thousands of mostly affluent Chinese keen to enjoy the cleaner air, educational opportunities and the more relaxed pace of life that Europe offers - and, unlike the refugees fleeing conflicts in the Middle East, these immigrants feel very welcome.
Yan Ding, who arrived in Budapest with his wife and young daughter in April 2015, is not untypical of the nearly 10,000 Chinese who have moved to Hungary under the scheme.
After selling property he had inherited from his parents, Beijing native Ding bought a bond worth 300,000 euros that gives him and his family the right to live for five years in Hungary, which is a member of the European Union.
"In China pollution is bad, and the cities grow so fast you cannot get the kind of education you would like for your child. The goal is for my child to be in a better environment, a good education like here in Hungary," he told Reuters through an interpreter.
His daughter, Xue Er, now enrolled in a local school and able to speak some Hungarian, has received warm support from teachers and administrators who have gone out of their way to accommodate her, Ding said.
He said that he wanted to spare his daughter the extreme competition among students in China which he attributed to the high number of pupils in each class. Hungary typically has up to 25 pupils in a class, which he said was very low by Chinese standards.
Participants in Hungary's residency scheme must stomp up funds not only for the bond but also for a hefty commission fee of 50,000 euros to the agency processing their application. But when their bond is redeemed after five years, they recover their 300,000 euros and keep the right to stay in Hungary.
Several other EU countries operate similar schemes but Hungary's is less expensive than most and offers residency rights straight away.
The red carpet rolled out for these well-heeled foreigners - the vast majority are Chinese, official statistics show - is in stark contrast to the opprobrium Orban has heaped on the hundreds of thousands of migrants who have fled to Europe over the past year, mostly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan.
Orban says those migrants, who are mostly Muslims, pose a threat to Europe's security and Christian civilisation.
He successfully lobbied Hungarians to reject in an Oct. 2 referendum migrant quotas the EU had proposed for member states. Turnout was too low to make the poll valid but he shows no sign of compromising on his refusal to take in migrants.
Ding rejects any comparison between the migrants now barred from Hungary by the new fence and bond purchasers like himself.
"Chinese immigrants are in completely different shoes," said Yan. "They have savings in China, property, therefore they have expectations. It is a different demographic."
"I doubt either the government or Hungarian society fail to see the difference ... Things are positive here (for us), nothing negative happens."
Many of the Chinese bond buyers have an entrepreneurial background and are keen to seek new investment opportunities.
Ding has co-founded a company to advise new arrivals on ways to invest their money in Hungary and beyond.
Zhang Jinjun, Ding's business partner, said that the new arrivals had invigorated commercial ties between Hungary and China, the world's second biggest economy.
"I have been here for 20 years. We have gone the classic way, clothes, shoes, and we are deeply into that business. Without new people we won't see new people coming in either," he said.
One recent sunny day Ding showed two newly arrived couples around a Budapest loft by the Danube where Chinese-owned businesses have offices to consider investment opportunities. Among companies examined was Oxytree, which sells a fast-growing tree bio-engineered for industrial and energy use.
Wang Minjun, who arrived in Hungary in February after selling audio systems in Guangzhou, China's largest metropolitan area, said he was researching the market for business prospects.
"At home I am dealing with hi-fi systems. I have not started that here yet, I am just doing some market research now," he said. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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